J. E. Smothers and Doris Smothers v. United States

642 F.2d 894, 47 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1372, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 14177
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 17, 1981
Docket79-1876
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 642 F.2d 894 (J. E. Smothers and Doris Smothers v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. E. Smothers and Doris Smothers v. United States, 642 F.2d 894, 47 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1372, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 14177 (5th Cir. 1981).

Opinions

WISDOM, Circuit Judge:

J. E. and Doris Smothers filed this civil action to obtain a refund of federal income taxes they paid under protest. This dispute arises from the dissolution of one of their wholly-owned business corporations. The taxpayers contend that the assets distributed to them by that corporation should be taxed at the capital gain rate applicable to liquidating distributions. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) counters by characterizing the dissolution as part of a reorganization, thereby rendering the taxpayers’ receipt of the distributed assets taxable at ordinary income rates. The district court viewed the transaction as a reorganization and ruled for the IRS. We affirm.

I.

The facts were stipulated. J. E. and Doris Smothers are married and reside in Corpus Christi, Texas. In 1956, they and an unrelated third party organized Texas Industrial Laundries of San Antonio, Inc. (TIL). The Smothers’ owned all of its outstanding stock from 1956 through the tax year in issue, 1969. TIL engaged in the business of renting industrial uniforms, and other industrial cleaning equipment, such as wiping cloths, dust control devices, and continuous toweling. It owned its own laundry equipment as well.

Shortly after the incorporation of TIL, the taxpayers organized another corporation, Industrial Uniform Services, Inc. (IUS), specifically to oppose a particular [896]*896competitor in the San Antonio industrial laundry market. The taxpayers owned all of the stock of IUS from the time of its organization until its dissolution. Unlike TIL, IUS did not own laundry equipment; it had to contract with an unrelated company to launder the uniforms it rented to customers. J. E. Smothers personally managed IUS, as well as TIL, but chose not to pay himself a salary from IUS in any of the years of its existence.1

IUS evidently succeeded in drawing business away from competing firms, for TIL purchased its main competitor in 1965. IUS continued in business, however, until 1969. On the advice of their accountant, the taxpayers then decided to dissolve IUS and sell all of its non-liquid assets to TIL. On November 1, 1969, IUS adopted a plan of liquidation in compliance with I.R.C. § 337,2 and on November 30, it sold the following assets to TIL for cash at their fair market value (stipulated to be the same as their book value):

Assets Amount

Noncompetitive covenant $ 3,894.60

Fixed assets 491.25

Rental Property 18,000.00

Prepaid insurance 240.21

Water deposit 7.50

Total $22,637.5623

The noncompetitive covenant constituted part of the consideration received by IUS from its purchase of a small competitor. The fixed assets consisted of incidental equipment (baskets, shelves, and a sewing machine), two depreciated delivery vehicles, and IUS’s part interest in an airplane. The rental property was an old apartment building in Corpus Christi on land with business potential. These assets collectively represented about 15% of IUS’s net value. The parties stipulated that none of these assets were necessary to carry out IUS’s business.

After this sale, IUS promptly distributed its remaining assets to its shareholders, the taxpayers, and then dissolved under Texas law:

Cash (received from TIL) $ 22,637.56

Cash (of IUS) 2,003.05

Notes receivable 138,000.00

Accrued interest receivable 35.42

Claim against the State of Texas 889.67

Liabilities assumed (14,403.35)

Total $149,162.35

TIL hired all three of IUS’s employees immediately after the dissolution, and TIL continued to serve most of IUS’s customers.

In computing their federal income tax liability for 1969, the taxpayers treated this distribution by IUS as a distribution in complete liquidation within § 331(a)(1). Accordingly, they reported the difference between the value of the assets they received in that distribution, $149,162.35, and the basis of their IUS stock, $1,000, as long-term capital gain. Upon audit, the IRS recharacterized the transaction between TIL and IUS as a reorganization within § 368(a)(1)(D), and therefore treated the distribution to the taxpayers as equivalent to a dividend under § 356(a)(2). Because IUS had sufficient earnings and profits to cover that distribution, the entire distribution was therefore taxable to the Smothers’ at ordinary income rates. The IRS timely assessed a $71,840.84 deficiency against the Smothers’. They paid that amount and filed this suit for a refund.

[897]*897The district court held that the transaction constituted a reorganization and rendered judgment for the IRS. United States v. Smothers, S.D.Tex.1979, 79-1 U.S.Tax. Cas. 86,414, 45 A.F.T.R.2d 80-596.

II.

Subchapter C of the Internal Revenue Code broadly contemplates that the retained earnings of a continuing business carried on in corporate form can be placed in the hands of its shareholders only after they pay a tax on those earnings at ordinary income rates. That general rule is, of course, primarily a consequence of § 301, which taxes dividend distributions as ordinary income. The Code provides for capital gain treatment of corporate distributions in a few limited circumstances, but only when there is either a significant change in relative ownership of the corporation, as in certain redemption transactions,4 or when the shareholders no longer conduct the business themselves in corporate form, as in true liquidation transactions.5 The history of Subchapter C in large part has been the story of how Congress, the courts, and the IRS have been called upon to foil attempts by taxpayers to abuse these exceptional provisions. Ingenious taxpayers have repeatedly devised transactions which formally come within these provisions, yet which have the effect of permitting shareholders to withdraw profits at capital gain rates while carrying on a continuing business enterprise in corporate form without substantial change in ownership. This is just such a case.

The transaction in issue here is of the genus known as liquidation-reincorporation, or reincorporation.6 The common denominator of such transactions is their use of the liquidation provisions of the Code, which permit liquidating distributions to be received at capital gain rates, as a device through which the dividend provisions may be circumvented.7 Reincorporations come in two basic patterns. In one, the corporation is dissolved and its assets are distributed to its shareholders in liquidation. The shareholders then promptly reincorporate all the assets necessary to the operation of the business, while retaining accumulated cash or other surplus assets. The transaction in this case is of the alternate form. In it, the corporation transfers the assets necessary to its business to another corporation owned by the same shareholders in exchange for securities or, as here, for cash, and then liquidates. If the minimal technical requirements of § 337 are met, as they indisputably were here, the exchange at the corporate level will not result in the recognition of gain by the transferor corporation.

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642 F.2d 894, 47 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1372, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 14177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-e-smothers-and-doris-smothers-v-united-states-ca5-1981.